Bio: Acclaimed science fiction writer Harry Harrison was born in Stamford Connecticut in 1925. After serving in the military as a gunnery instructor during World War II, he attended art school and spent years working as an artist and illustrator in New York City. When he began his writing career, he found he needed a change of scenery and moved to Mexico with his wife and child. Harrison's propensity for itinerancy took the family to England, Italy and Denmark, among other places. During the course of his writing career he published over forty novels including the West of Eden trilogy, the popular Stainless Steel Rat series, Make Room! Make Room! and the graphic novel Death World. His novels have been translated into over twenty five languages, and in 1973 he was honored with the Nebula Award. Harry Harrison lives in Ireland.

when new books by Harry Harrison are released.

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Deathworld II: The Ethical Engineer
On the planet Pyrrus, human colonists have fought a centuries-old war with the native life forms. These life forms adapt to human tactics and technology, evolving new species so rapidly that natives returning from even brief trips off planet must be carried in protective armor canisters from their ship to the safe buildings, where they will learn of the latest deadly threats. "The Ethical Engineer" is the second volume in the DEATHWORLD series. It was originally published as a two-part serial i... more info>>
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The Stainless Steel Rat in The Missing Battleship
Slippery Jim diGriz--a.k.a. The Stainless Steel Rat--is back in this classic adventure, originally published in the April, 1960 issue of Astounding Science Fiction! It might seem a little careless to lose track of something as big as a battleship ... but interstellar space is on a different scale of magnitude. But a misplaced battleship--in the wrong hands!--can be most dangerous.
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Down to Earth and Other Stories
From one of the best, Science Fiction Grand Master Harry Harrison, comes seven fantastic stories of space, aliens, war, and robots. And his stories always have the backbone of the human condition to support them. Includes the stories: DOWN TO EARTH, SIMULATED TRAINER, WELCOMING COMMITTEE, WORLD IN THE BALANCE, THE K-FACTOR, THE WORLD OTALMI MADE
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Make Room! Make Room!: (Basis for Soylent Green)
It is the year 1999 and the world has become grimly, terribly overpopulated. This is the premise of Harry Harrison's 1966 novel Make Room! Make Room! and fans of his more comic work may be surprised at this bleak, foreboding novel. But Harrison's purpose in writing this book was serious and his concerns were real. Although his fears thankfully did not become a reality for the inhabitants of New York and the rest of the United States, the novel remains a gripping, thought-provoking work about pri... more info>>
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Navy Day
The Army had a new theme song: "Anything you can do, we can do better!" And they meant anything, including up-to-date hornpipes! A classic science fiction tale from the pages of "If -- Worlds of Science Fiction," January 1954 issue.
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Planet of the Damned
72 Hours in Hell! Dis was a harsh, inhospitable, dangerous place and the Magter made it worse. They might have been human once--but they were something else now. The Magter had only one desire--to kill everything, themselves, their planet, the universe if they could. Brion Brandd was sent in at the eleventh hour. His mission was to save Dis, but it looked as though he was going to preside over its annihilation. Planet of the Damned!
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The K-Factor
Speed never hurt anybody--it's the sudden stop at the end. It's not how much change that signals danger, but how fast it's changing.... A classic from the Golden Age of Science Fiction, selected and edited by the legendary John W. Campbell, Jr. for "Analog."
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The Repairman
The Mark III Hyperspace Beacon was the earliest type of beacon ever built--by Earth, no less. It was located on one of the Proxima Centauri planets, and it wasn't working. This was one of those jobs when being an interstellar trouble-shooter wouldn't have been so bad--if he could have shot the trouble! A classic science fiction tale from the author of the "Stainless Steel Rat," "Bill the Galactic Hero," and "Eden" series!
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The Velvet Glove
Despite the Robot Equality Act, being a robot is tough. Jon Venex, a robot designed for work on Venus, needed a job bad or it could mean the scrap heap. When he found a job listing for Venex robot, it sounded too good to be true. And when you're a second-class citizen, like a robot, it usually is. He soon finds himself embroiled in a scheme with underground crime--literally and figuratively!
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The Web of the Worlds
"This must be another world altogether, separate from his own in time and space. He wasn't sure about the details―it had been a long time since he had read H. P. Lovecraft―but this theory seemed the most tenable." Grant O'Reilly was not the adventurous type. A sheltered invalid as a child, who used books for accompaniment, he had barely begun to live his life before the great change occurred. Suddenly, about to be married, he is taken by a seizure to wake in a land like none he had k... more info>>
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Toy Shop
The gadget was strictly, beyond any question, a toy. Not a real, workable device. Except for the way it could work under a man's mental skin.... A science fiction classic, originally published in Analog Science Fiction, April 1962 issue.
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